The "V2" doesn't stand for version 2 rocket, it is "Vengeance Weapon 2". Vengeance Weapon 1 was a jet powered missile.
The V1 was fast but the allies had fighters fast enough that they could and sometimes did shoot them down in flight. Literally it's ONLY defense was speed. It didn't evade at all because it wasn't piloted so if you could get into the right place to intercept it, it could be shot down. The main counter argument to this is that it really made no difference. Once the USSR survived the initial onslaught and the US got involved, the Germans simply had no chance. If you look at production figures the British more-or-less matched German production. Soviet production was substantially higher than German/British and US Production dwarfed all of that. Nothing the Germans could have done would have been enough to dig them out of that hole. Blitzkreig didn't stop working. Essentially it is modern mechanized warfare as it is still practiced today. The problem for the Germans wasn't that it stopped working it was two things:
- Everybody else caught up, and
- Scale.
The scale issue is the most fascinating thing about WWII to me. When Germany invaded France in 1940 they had ~2,500 tanks. Three years later they had ~3,000 tanks at the Battle of Kursk and that was just one battle on the Eastern Front and they were easily outnumbered by superior Soviet Tanks. Two years after that the Soviets hit Berlin with more than 6,000 tanks. Ie, the Soviets had more tanks facing just the City of Berlin in 1945 than the Germans had facing the entire nation of France five years earlier.
The Germans simply couldn't keep up with the expansion in scale.
One thing about the German army of WWII that most people don't realize is that it wasn't all that mechanized. They had highly mechanized units at the tip of the spear but the vast majority of the German troops that went into the Soviet Union walked and most of their gear was carried by wagons pulled by animals. In the US, UK, and USSR armies of 1945 not only was the tip of the spear mechanized, the entire army was mechanized with Studebaker Trucks (including for the Soviets) handling the logistics.
I forgot it was called Vengeance weapon, but my point stands. V2 rocket was the first one, it was the precursor to modern ICBM's. It was mentioned how the range was limited by only being a single stage, there was no launch tower like modern rockets have and you'd need all that infrastructure to fuel and load a rocket of larger size.
V1 was basically a cruise missile, they called it the buzz bomb.
Agree on Blitzkreig, it's not that it stopped working, it's that the rest of the world figured out how to defend it.
Agree on everything else, it's just interesting the way it worked out.
One more thing, the Russians/Soviets can and did sacrifice millions more soldiers than any other Army willingly would. They basically used their soldiers as sacrificial lambs, there is a video somewhere that drastically illustrates the losses the Red Army endured. Off memory, the US suffered something like 200,000 casualties in WWII (I may be thinking total casualties, not deaths). Germans were like 2 million, Britain 500,000. It's been awhile, so forgive me if I'm misremembering.
Soviets lost like 30,000,000. Many, many more times the number.